Giugiaro joined Corrozeria Ghia in December of 1965 and worked on two designs presented to the public at the Geneva Motor Show three months later. The first one, the G230S-delivered Ghia 450 SS, as Giugiaro's contribution only involved modifying a few details (grille, light clusters) and not the basic shape.
The Isuzu 117 coupe was the Turin designer's first real research project in his new capacity as Styling and Design Center director at Ghia.
In Japan, the 117 coupe became a classic among four-seater coupes. The car went into mass production in 1968 and stayed for thirteen years, with almost 100,000 units to its credit. Substituted in 1981 by the Isuzu Piazza, designed by Giugiaro at Italdesign. So much so that, along the lines of the noblest clubs of European car lovers, when it left production, an Isuzu 117 Fan Club was founded that keeps the historical record and organizes meetings and shows.
Giugiaro had a four-seater coupe theme which led him naturally to the shape layout of the Fiat Dino.
In a more compact form, this design repeats the Dino's belt-line movement and the cut of the trunk lid.
The design of the back side window is original: the window base runs parallel with the belt line rising slightly towards the tail, while the top line is broken just at the start of the C-pillar.
The classic front end sports double circular headlights with a horizontal mesh grille.
The trunk lid catches the eye for its very low cut, done to divide the tail section into two symmetrical parts. The rear light clusters are unusual in their upside-down isosceles trapezoidal shape with rounded corners.
The 117 Giugiaro, a super-refined version boasting newly designed interiors, went on the market in 1979. Upholstery and seating expressed shapes, materials, and colors that the designer had chosen one year earlier for the Italdesign Megagamma concept car.
Source: www.isuzuperformance.com
Images: 117history.com; svammelsurium.blogg.se; www.2000gt.net
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